Trae Young’s bag of tricks holds more than 30-footers

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HIS FINISHING MOVE was probably unnecessary, but Trae Young knows he wouldn’t be here watching the play otherwise.

Young, his Atlanta Hawks jerseys on display all around him, is sitting in a folding chair inside the locker room of the team’s shimmering, new practice facility.

The Hawks call this area their “flex space,” and today, it’s serving as Young’s personal film room. He peers down at the screen beside him to watch a highlight he has seen countless times.

“Oh yep,” he says with a coy grin. “This play.”

Young is about to school LaMarcus Aldridge.

In the video, Young catches the San Antonio Spurs‘ big man in a one-on-one mismatch in a tight game on Nov. 5, hitting the seven-time All-Star with back-to-back crossovers before blowing by him and firing a one-handed, no-look dime to a cutting DeAndre’ Bembry.

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Trae Young dances around LaMarcus Aldridge with fancy dribbling and drops off a pass to DeAndre’ Bembry for a slam in the lane.

Rewatching now, Young is asked why he pulled the ball back a second time. After all, he already had Aldridge beat.

“Sometimes I like having fun,” Young says.

A few things stands out the more you watch Young with the ball in his hands: He’s always in control. He’s always slightly ahead. And there is always function to the flash.

“Immediately once I get past LaMarcus, my read is not Derrick [White], it’s the guy behind him,” Young adds. “For me, I know I’m probably not going to score this. So it’s either a lob at the rim or [pass to Bembry], who likes to cut and slash to the basket.”

Young runs through more highlights, some recognizable, some subtle — a 3-pointer that was part of this career-high 49 points on Nov. 29, a perfect touchdown pass assist from last season.

They are all examples of why Young has vaulted to fourth in the NBA in scoring at 28.8 points and has taken the early lead in All-Star voting among Eastern Conference guards, all despite the ongoing struggles of the 8-28 Hawks.

The tight handle, the herky-jerky change of pace, the floaters, the runners, the tear drops, the step-backs, the deep 3s off the dribble — it’s all there, all showcasing a deep bag of tricks belonging to one of the league’s most exciting phenoms.

MORE: Is Trae Young really an All-Star?Insider


TRAE YOUNG CAN’T dunk.

Well, he can, it’s more that he chooses not to. Most NBA origin stories include the time and date of their first dunk, a sort of coming-of-age, eureka moment that alerts everyone — including themselves — that there is some special talent within.

Young’s first dunk was his junior year of high school. Or maybe it was his sophomore year? His dad, Rayford Young, is having a hard time remembering.

“I wouldn’t really call it a dunk even,” Rayford Young says, laughing to himself. “It was more of a throw-in. But I always told him I’d count it as a dunk. He tried to dunk on people a few times, and it’s actually pretty funny to me to see him try.”



Source : ESPN